Faculty members reveal how cultural events calendar comes to fruition
The cultural calendar. It’s never a surprise when it shows up in students’ campus boxes, a tangible reminder of a new semester in bloom.
The cultural calendar. It’s never a surprise when it shows up in students’ campus boxes, a tangible reminder of a new semester in bloom.
As millions of people watched the Democratic and Republican National Conventions on their televisions and computers, arguably the most buzzed-about speeches were not from the candidates themselves, but from their wives. Now, party members believe in their presidential nominee, but they have also come to believe in his other half.
From towering inflatable slides to a clown making colorful balloon animals, the landscape of Burlington’s City Park was vibrant for this year’s 25th annual Burlington Carousel Festival. “The City Park is our largest park and serves as the location of our yearly festival,” said Mary Faucette, special events supervisor for the Burlington Recreation and Parks Department.
The congregation is small in size but big in presence, and he stands in the back. As the chords of “Amazing Grace” swell, his arms rise above his head and his closed eyes turn upward.
The U.S. Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against the Alamance County Sheriff's Office and Sheriff Terry Johnson Thursday seeking to speak with employees of the local government office without the presence of County Attorney Clyde Albright. The DOJ released the results of a two-year investigation Tuesday, which indicated Alamance County Sheriff's Office has participated in discriminatory acts against Latinos. The Department determined the Sheriff's office "engaged in a pattern or practice of violations of the United States Constitution and federal law," according to an article published in The Burlington Times-News. In June 2010, the DOJ informed the Sheriff's office and Terry Johnson, Alamance County sheriff of an investigation into allegations of discriminatory acts concerning policing and unconstitutional searches and seizures, the Times-News reported. ASCO and Johnson question the validity of the Department's findings, attributing the final decision to the political agenda of the Obama administration.
Universities and colleges across the country are increasingly building on-campus housing with the amenities and feel of high-class hotels.
Freshman Shane Dittmar has a passion for singing and playing piano, and he has also been blind since birth. The 18-year-old singer and piano-player was born with "Leber's Congenital Amaurosis," a disease that left both him and his twin brother blind since they were born. "We were born blind, mostly blind, not completely blind," Dittmar said. Growing up his eyesight never changed, and neither did his love for music.
Outings to the movie theater don’t always fit into the average college student’s budget. But with its Movie Run program, Elon University’s Student Union Board has been helping to offset the cost of a night at Carousel Cinemas in Alamance Crossing since 2005. Previously, students could purchase $5 tickets from 5-6 p.m.
Police were out in full force this weekend. And with them? Alcohol Law Enforcement, or ALE. ALE is a state-wide branch of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety.
Politicians have a reputation for either manipulating the truth or leaving out important details in order to better their image to American voters.
Chris Thomas, a senior forward on the Elon University men’s soccer team, had 10 goals last season.
It all started on the morning of May 15, 2006. Richard Stefanacci was diagnosed with a form of pediatric cancer called Ewing’s Sarcoma.
The College Democrats and College Republicans advocate for opposing candidates, but the Elon University chapters still share one common goal. “We want discussion,” said junior Patrick Brown, president of the College Republicans.
My journey to Barcelona was uneventful. I packed everything I needed, didn’t forget my contacts and made both of my flights with time to spare. But one image stuck in my mind. As I was going through security in the Boston airport, I noticed an older man and his son directly in line directly behind me.
It’s been three different kinds of opponents in three games this season for the Phoenix. A clearly superior opponent in North Carolina, a clearly inferior opponent in West Virginia State, and an opponent hovering somewhere around Elon’s level in North Carolina Central. Elon did what they had to do this weekend, easily dispatching West Virginia State University in the team’s final non-conference game of the season before embarking on what could be called murderers row of the Southern Conference over the next three weeks. This week, Elon opens conference play in Statesboro, Ga.
On SGA Executive Vice President Connor O’Donnell’s desk, there sits a resolution. Drafted and submitted by Spectrum, Elon University’s queer-straight alliance, it opposes Chick-fil-A’s presence on campus and asserts the need for its removal.
The community atmosphere at Elon University prompted sophomore Laurel Weibe to uprot from Chicago and relocate to a smaller town in North Carolina. While Weibe said she loved the big city, she felt Loyola Chicago University lacked a sense of community and personal relationships with the professors. “Classes were not engaging,” she said.
While many Elon University students were getting settled into the routine of a new school year, others were hundreds of miles away, adjusting to the rhythm of the national conventions.
A missing person report concerning a Burlington resident attracted the attention of a reality television series this season. This fall, interested viewers can watch as the Burlington Police Department investigates the disappearance of a local woman on an episode of “Find Our Missing” on TV One, a cable channel based in Silver Spring. The show will follow Staff Sgt.
Eight Elon University students were accepted into the Executive Intern Program this year after undergoing an application process headed by SGA Executive President Darien Flowers and President Leo Lambert.